Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn" in English language version.

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  • Scammell, Michael (11 December 2018). "The Writer Who Destroyed an Empire". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 1 January 2022. In 1973, still in the Soviet Union, he sent abroad his literary and polemical masterpiece, 'The Gulag Archipelago.' The nonfiction account exposed the enormous crimes that had led to the wholesale incarceration and slaughter of millions of innocent victims, demonstrating that its dimensions were on a par with the Holocaust. Solzhenitsyn's gesture amounted to a head-on challenge to the Soviet state, calling its very legitimacy into question and demanding revolutionary change.
  • Wheatcroft, Stephen (1996). "The Scale and Nature of German and Soviet Repression and Mass Killings, 1930–45" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 48 (8): 1330. doi:10.1080/09668139608412415. JSTOR 152781. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. When Solzhenitsyn wrote and distributed his Gulag Archipelago it had enormous political significance and greatly increased popular understanding of part of the repression system. But this was a literary and political work; it never claimed to place the camps in a historical or social-scientific quantitative perspective, Solzhenitsyn cited a figure of 12–15 million in the camps. But this was a figure that he hurled at the authorities as a challenge for them to show that the scale of the camps was less than this.

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  • Solzhenitsyn, Aleksandr I (1–7 January 2003), Chukovskaya, Lydia (ed.), "200 Years Together", Orthodoxy Today (interview), archived from the original on 5 March 2005, retrieved 13 March 2004

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  • Савельев, Дмитрий (2006). "Узловая элегия". In Аркус, Л (ed.). Сокуров: Части речи: Сборник [Sokurov: Part of Speech: Collection]. Vol. 2. Санкт-Петербург: Сеанс. ISBN 978-5-901586-10-5. Archived from the original on 4 October 2011.

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  • Wheatcroft, Stephen (1996). "The Scale and Nature of German and Soviet Repression and Mass Killings, 1930–45" (PDF). Europe-Asia Studies. 48 (8): 1330. doi:10.1080/09668139608412415. JSTOR 152781. Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. When Solzhenitsyn wrote and distributed his Gulag Archipelago it had enormous political significance and greatly increased popular understanding of part of the repression system. But this was a literary and political work; it never claimed to place the camps in a historical or social-scientific quantitative perspective, Solzhenitsyn cited a figure of 12–15 million in the camps. But this was a figure that he hurled at the authorities as a challenge for them to show that the scale of the camps was less than this.

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